Search for 511 keV Emission in Satellite Galaxies of the Milky Way with INTEGRAL/SPI
Thomas Siegert, Roland Diehl, Aaron C. Vincent, Fabrizia Guglielmetti,, Martin G. H. Krause, Celine Boehm

TL;DR
This study searches for 511 keV gamma-ray emission in satellite galaxies of the Milky Way using INTEGRAL/SPI, aiming to test dark matter annihilation hypotheses and analyze potential signals, with Reticulum II showing a notable detection.
Contribution
First comprehensive search for 511 keV emission in 39 dwarf satellite galaxies, constraining dark matter annihilation scenarios and analyzing the nature of detected signals.
Findings
Reticulum II shows a 3.1 sigma signal.
Five other sources show tentative 2 sigma signals.
Flux values exceed expectations from dark matter models.
Abstract
The positron annihilation gamma-ray signal in the Milky Way (MW) shows a puzzling morphology: a very bright bulge and a very low surface-brightness disk. A coherent explanation of the positron origin, propagation through the Galaxy and subsequent annihilation in the interstellar medium has not yet been found. Tentative explanations involve positrons from radioactivity, X-ray binaries, and dark matter (DM). Dwarf satellite galaxies (DSGs) are believed to be DM-dominated and hence promising candidates in the search for 511 keV emission as a result of DM annihilation into electron-positron pairs. The goal of this study is to constrain possible 511 keV gamma-ray signals from 39 DSGs of the MW and to test the annihilating DM scenario. We use the spectrometer SPI on INTEGRAL to extract individual spectra for the studied objects. As the diffuse galactic emission dominates the signal, the large…
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